Racism and Religion: Sanctified bigotry, or unity and diversity solutions?

By Rusty Wright

Derek Chauvin’s conviction for killing George Floyd has returned race issues to public discourse’s center stage.  In a world rocked by racial turmoil and demands for justice and equality, some view the Christian church as part of the problem – white supremacy, discrimination, apathy.  Consider one faith movement’s efforts to become part of the solution.

Prisoner to pastor

Dax Palmer’s unusual career path is taking him from prisoner to pastor.  As a Black California drug seller, he experienced multiple incarcerations.  In penitentiary, he found faith in Jesus.  Paroled in 2008, he pursued YMCA work, then joined the staff of a Raleigh, NC, Presbyterian church as community outreach coordinator. 

Feeling out of place in the mostly white congregation, he encountered at a convention other African-American faith leaders who deepened his commitment to serve where he was.  “I felt like I could be a part of this,” he reflected to byFaith magazine.  He now helps church members engage with people of color and liaises with leaders serving refugees, the homeless, and human trafficking victims.

Unity Fund

Palmer also attends graduate school aided by the PCA Unity Fund, established in 2016 to help develop diverse leadership in the Presbyterian Church in America (PCA).  The fund assists men and women of various US minorities, including Blacks, Asians and Latinas/os. 

Cornell grad Soojin Park, a Korean-American woman, got Unity Fund assistance for her graduate ministry education in DC.  Nikki Ellis, a Black woman, received a Unity Fund scholarship for her faith-service studies at a Florida graduate school.

The PCA, founded in 1973, made news in 2018 by unanimously electing its first African-American moderator at its annual General Assembly.  (The moderator becomes the organization’s face for a year.)  That moderator, Irwyn Ince, directs a Washington, DC-area institute to train faith leaders in cross-cultural work, helping churches and organizations to “welcome others…[of] all cultures…as Christ welcomes us.”

Disclosure:  I’ve been a PCA member since its inception. But since I don’t regularly follow PCA national matters, I was unaware of these developments until a friend – knowing my racial equality interests – recently alerted me.  I learned more of the inspiring backstory.

Unity/diversity backstory

At the 2015 General Assembly, octogenarian Mississippi pastor James Baird – a PCA founding leader – made an impassioned speech for racial reconciliation.  (More disclosure: Jim Baird was my pastor for several years.)

Speaking of the PCA’s launch, he said, “I confess that I did not raise a finger for civil rights. ….I’m not confessing the sin of my fathers, I’m confessing my sin, and of [his founding colleagues]. Were we racists?  No.  But we did not do anything to help our black brethren.”

One observer noted that “many…in the room began to weep. It was as if a great weight was being lifted off of us. We were finally beginning to be honest about our past and to confess it so that healing can come.” Participants “began flooding to the microphones to confess their sins of involvement in and complicity with racial injustice.”

Proclamation

The following year, the PCA officially proclaimed that it:

“… does recognize, confess, condemn and repent of corporate and historical sins, including those committed during the Civil Rights era, and continuing racial sins of ourselves and our fathers such as the segregation of worshipers by race; the exclusion of persons from Church membership on the basis of race; the exclusion of churches, or elders, from membership in the Presbyteries on the basis of race; the teaching that the Bible sanctions racial segregation and discourages inter-racial marriage; the participation in and defense of white supremacist organizations; and the failure to live out the gospel imperative that ‘love does no wrong to a neighbor’ (Romans 13:10).”

Similar sentiments and plans of action emerged from PCA leaders amid 2020 US racial turmoil.  Unity Fund beneficiary Dax Palmer feels “the PCA is putting its money where its mouth is…trying their best to help open the doors for other minorities….”

It’s an ongoing process.  May their tribe increase.

Rusty Wright is an author and lecturer who has spoken on six continents.  He holds Bachelor of Science (psychology) and Master of Theology degrees from Duke and Oxford universities, respectively.  www.RustyWright.com

Copyright © 2021 Rusty Wright

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Editors:  Note pictures below.  For access to these images and more, check here and here

Outreach director Dax Palmer. Image courtesy Christ the King Church, Raleigh, NC. www.ctkraleigh.org.
Rev. Irwyn Ince. Image courtesy Irwyn Ince. www.facebook.com/revirwynince.